Compile Typescript Libraries to Multiple Formats

It can be difficult to set up a typescript library to compile to ESM and CommonJS. As of Nx 16.8, you can use the @nx/rollup:rollup executor to take care of it for you.

Use Rollup to Compile your TypeScript Project

If you do not use Rollup already, install the corresponding Nx plugin as follows:

Make sure the version of @nx/rollup matches your other @nx/* package versions.

You can then configure Rollup to compile your library by adding a build target to your project.json or package.json file. Here's an example:

packages/my-awesome-lib/project.json
1{ 2 "name": "my-awesome-lib", 3 "nx": { 4 "targets": { 5 "build": { 6 "executor": "@nx/rollup:rollup", 7 "options": { 8 "main": "packages/my-awesome-lib/src/index.ts" 9 } 10 } 11 } 12 } 13} 14
Nx 15 and lower use @nrwl/ instead of @nx/

If you happen to use the @nx/js:tsc executor already, you can also use the Rollup configuration generator from the Nx Rollup plugin to automatically configure your project's build target.

Configure Rollup to Create Multiple Formats

You'll need to specify format, additionalEntryPoints and generateExportsField in the executor options. Here's an example:

packages/my-awesome-lib/project.json
1{ 2 "name": "my-awesome-lib", 3 "targets": { 4 "build": { 5 "executor": "@nx/rollup:rollup", 6 "options": { 7 "main": "packages/my-awesome-lib/src/index.ts", 8 "format": ["esm", "cjs"], 9 "additionalEntryPoints": ["packages/my-awesome-lib/src/foo.ts"], 10 "generateExportsField": true 11 } 12 } 13 } 14} 15
Nx 15 and lower use @nrwl/ instead of @nx/

After compiling our package using nx build my-awesome-lib we'll get the following output in our dist folder.

1my-awesome-lib 2└─ . 3 ├─ README.md 4 ├─ foo.cjs.d.ts 5 ├─ foo.cjs.js 6 ├─ foo.esm.js 7 ├─ index.cjs.d.ts 8 ├─ index.cjs.js 9 ├─ index.esm.js 10 ├─ package.json 11 └─ src 12 ├─ foo.d.ts 13 ├─ index.d.ts 14 └─ lib 15 └─ my-awesome-lib.d.ts 16

And our package.json will look like this:

dist/my-awesome-lib/package.json
1{ 2 "name": "my-awesome-lib", 3 "version": "0.0.1", 4 ... 5 "type": "commonjs", 6 "main": "./index.cjs.js", 7 "typings": "./src/index.d.ts", 8 "exports": { 9 "./package.json": "./package.json", 10 ".": { 11 "import": "./index.esm.js", 12 "default": "./index.cjs.js" 13 }, 14 "./foo": { 15 "import": "./foo.esm.js", 16 "default": "./foo.cjs.js" 17 } 18 }, 19 "module": "./index.esm.js" 20} 21 22

Now consumers of your package can access the appropriate format for their codebase and you don't have to worry about maintaining the infrastructure to compile to both formats.